I think some of the clues that Shannow is looking for may be found in
the Lubrizol site.
They mention a spike in demand for shear stable friction modifiers for
HDMOs and other applications.
Additive packages that alter the viscosity behavior of a lubricant
may slip through cracks in the mono-grade rule of no VIIs.
It may be a possibility that the rules only applied to a type of VII,
and not all the VIIs that have been invented since the rule was written.
For the purpose of this discussion, lets assume that any additive that changes the
viscosity behavior of a fluid is a VII.
Would it be possible to render down hours of reading to a few items that all agree on?
the Lubrizol site.
They mention a spike in demand for shear stable friction modifiers for
HDMOs and other applications.
Additive packages that alter the viscosity behavior of a lubricant
may slip through cracks in the mono-grade rule of no VIIs.
It may be a possibility that the rules only applied to a type of VII,
and not all the VIIs that have been invented since the rule was written.
For the purpose of this discussion, lets assume that any additive that changes the
viscosity behavior of a fluid is a VII.
Would it be possible to render down hours of reading to a few items that all agree on?